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Experimental Learning Environments at Clemson University Libraries

March 17, 2016

Christopher Vinson
Head of Library Technology
Clemson University

Patricia Carbajales-Dale
Co-Director, Clemson Center for Geospatial Technologies
Clemson University

Bobby Hollandsworth
Associate Librarian, Learning Commons Coordinator
Clemson University

Wesley Smith
Adobe Digital Studio Manager
Clemson University

This panel will discuss the development and emerging services of three next-generation, experimental learning environments recently opened at Clemson University Libraries: the Clemson Center for Geospatial Technologies, the Adobe Digital Studio, and the Brown Digital Resources Laboratory. All three areas are the result of a collaboration between Clemson’s University Libraries and Computing & Information Technology Division and other external partners, including Dell, Adobe, and the National Science Foundation. The panel will outline the services offered in these spaces; the impact they have had on learning, engagement, and innovation at the University; the challenges that come with working on such large, collaborative efforts; and our vision to essentially redefine the idea of public service, space, and research development within libraries.

http://www.clemsongis.org/
http://libraries.clemson.edu/services/adobe-digital-studio/
http://citi.clemson.edu/drl/about.html

Filed Under: CNI Spring 2016 Project Briefings, Project Briefing Pages, Spaces, Teaching & Learning
Tagged With: cni2016spring, Project Briefings & Plenary Sessions

Expert Curation of SHARE Data Set: Pedagogy and Community Engagement

March 17, 2016

Judy Ruttenberg
Program Director
Association of Research Libraries

Cynthia Hudson-Vitale
Digital Data Outreach Librarian
Washington University in St. Louis

Jeff Spies
Co-founder and Chief Technology Officer
Center for Open Science

Since its beta launch in April 2015, the SHARE data set has grown to over 4.5 million records and 95 providers including CrossRef, PubMedCentral, DataOne, library institutional repositories, and more. Drawing from many distributed repositories, SHARE metadata requires enhancement, expert curation, and the linking of objects together as part of the same activity; this work is best accomplished through community engagement and involvement. Automatic enhancement techniques can only do so much and, even then, require expertly curated training sets. To address this need, the SHARE team launched a pedagogy and community engagement initiative that creates digital curation training partnerships with library and information science (LIS) graduate programs and digital librarians. Speakers will address the power and efficacy of service-based learning in open source development and the opportunity SHARE presents in the library world. The SHARE team will report on a pilot project with one LIS master’s degree program at the University of Missouri, Columbia and the launch of a curation and training program for digital library practitioners to gain valuable computational skills while contributing value to SHARE as a community resource.

http://www.share-research.org
https://osf.io/share/?

Presentation (PDF)

Filed Under: CNI Spring 2016 Project Briefings, Digital Curation, Metadata, Project Briefing Pages, Repositories
Tagged With: cni2016spring, Project Briefings & Plenary Sessions

Exploring the Potential of New Faculty Profile Systems

March 17, 2016

Michelle Armstrong
Head of Scholarly Communications and Data Management, Albertsons Library
Boise State University

Eli Windchy
Vice President, Consulting Services
bepress

Maliaca Oxnam
Associate Librarian, Office of Digital Innovation & Stewardship, University Libraries
University of Arizona

It Takes a Village: From Colleagues to Community with New Library-stewarded Faculty Profiles (Armstrong, Windchy)

Overhauling a publicly visible, widely used resource for academic and professional advancement is no small matter. The blueprint’s specifications must be clear and well defined by users, in this case the community of libraries and faculty using the faculty profile platform SelectedWorks.

In this project briefing we’ll provide an overview of the platform’s recent overhaul, designed to support a new model of faculty support evolving in libraries today. Attendees will hear from the perspective of a research university how the library has adopted this model of greater library-faculty collaboration using tools that are more responsive to faculty’s changing digital needs. We will share how these scalable tools, including detailed readership metrics and the ability to showcase all types of scholarship, benefit authors as well as the library and the institution as a whole. Attendees will also learn about the decision to rebuild the SelectedWorks platform, and how feedback from the bepress community informed the development roadmap and next steps. Finally, we will share some of the lessons learned through the process and provide a glimpse into future development.

Presentation (Windchy)

Graph Database + Faculty Activity Reporting = User-Driven Business Intelligence (Oxnam)

After implementing a mandatory, campus-wide activity reporting and annual performance review system, the University of Arizona (UA) began experimenting with graph database technologies to maximize the utility of data held in the campus data systems combined with the self-reported activities and tagging in UA Vitae, the faculty activity reporting and evaluation system. While the first phase output is a much-improved campus directory and faculty profile system, the powerful data relationships forged through graph database structures provide a glimpse at the powerful potential for real-time, user-driven business intelligence. This project is a collaboration between the University Libraries, University Information Technology and the Provost’s Office.

http://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/sw_gallery.html
http://works.bepress.com

Filed Under: Assessment, CNI Spring 2016 Project Briefings, Project Briefing Pages, Repositories, Scholarly Communication
Tagged With: cni2016spring, Project Briefings & Plenary Sessions

From Invasive to Integrated: Information Technology and Library Leadership, Structure, and Culture

March 17, 2016

Lisa Janicke Hinchliffe
Professor/Coordinator for Information Literacy, University Library & Affiliated Faculty, Graduate School of Library and Information Science
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Dale Askey
Associate University Librarian, Library and Learning Technologies & Administrative Director, Lewis & Ruth Sherman Centre for Digital Scholarship
McMaster University

Given the number and variety of significant information technology (IT) projects supported and led by research libraries, one could incorrectly assume that IT has been successfully integrated into our organizations. Unlike other recent library service program developments (information literacy and scholarly communication), which also started on the margins, IT has not found its way to the “middle” in most of our organizations. IT workers, not solely but in particular, experience the lingering divide between IT and the library culture as an unproductive chasm.

Currently, we are experiencing multiple acute phenomena that indicate just how much work remains to make real the notion that libraries are essentially technology organizations. Three examples will illustrate this. The lack of qualified applicants for leadership roles such as “associate university librarian for IT” (however phrased) is the first indication that something is amiss. Second, the degree to which IT units are treated as “other” in library strategy development – as an implementation utility rather than a strategic participant – indicates the “foreign body” aspect of IT. Third, the resonance of well-publicized sexist and racist issues in the commercial IT sector, e.g., GamerGate, repeated circling of the “techbro” wagons, etc., within our organizations reveal discontent with IT culture writ large. While some claim with obvious relief that “we” are not “they,” on closer examination our own IT departments often look little different than those where the issues have manifested themselves as undeniably founded in gender, racial, and sexual biases.

In this issue-oriented session, the discussion will cover three aspects (while also, of course, being shaped by participant interest). First, we will offer a number of assertions about the state of IT culture and leadership in libraries. Some of these include the privileging of “hard” IT experience over library experience when considering candidates for leadership positions and the corollary exclusion of IT staff from “library” management as well as a tendency to silo IT into a unit more aligned with administrative than user services. From there, we will explore the missed opportunities our persistence with existing practices and norms has created, specifically our inability to come to terms with the lack of diversity in our IT staff. Finally, we will offer suggestions for rethinking how we approach IT leadership, structure, and culture in libraries in order to stimulate a reflective and probing conversation with those in attendance with the goal of creating a call to re-attend to the importance of bringing IT in from the margins if libraries are to truly serve the needs of their communities in this digital age.

Presentation (PDF)

Filed Under: CNI Spring 2016 Project Briefings, Economic Models, Project Briefing Pages
Tagged With: cni2016spring, Project Briefings & Plenary Sessions

The Future of Organization Identifiers

March 17, 2016

Laure Haak
Executive Director
ORCID

Geoffrey Bilder
Director of Strategic Initiatives
Crossref

Patricia Cruse
Executive Director
DataCite

The research community has made significant progress in describing, supporting, and adopting persistent identifiers for people, datasets, and publications. However, despite excellent work undertaken by existing players, there is no consistently adopted, open, community-driven infrastructure providing organization identifiers. In this session, we will provide an overview of current and potential uses of organization identifiers, current state of the art, a summary of topical reports and working papers (NISO, Jisc/CASRAI, Crossref, RDA), then move to reviewing a draft proposal for a ‘minimum viable product’ to serve community needs. Our goals are to stimulate conversation and gather input on a set of next steps for an open organization identifier infrastructure.

Filed Under: CNI Spring 2016 Project Briefings, Identity Management, Metadata, Project Briefing Pages, Standards
Tagged With: cni2016spring, Project Briefings & Plenary Sessions, Videos

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